21.6.07

War on Ghana's Oil Find

The Minority in Parliament on Thursday debunked government claims that under the current regime, the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) was producing oil while it produced salt under the previous National Democratic Congress (NDC) regime.

They said the GNPC under the NDC produced some 62,000 barrels of oil during the testing of a horizontal well drilled in the South Tano field in 1992.
Briefing the parliamentary press corps in response to statements made by the President and his key Ministers on the oil find and energy situation in the country, Mr Moses Asaga, Ranking Member on Energy said under the PNDC and the NDC governments oil was refined at the Tema Oil Refinery, while the GNPC restarted production in the Saltpond in November 2000.

"Besides, in petroleum industry, sodium bicarbonate (salt) is a very important resource which the industry would have required, therefore it was not wrong for the GNPC to have invested in that area." The Energy Minister on Tuesday addressed Parliament wielding a bag of salt and bottle of oil to tell the story of the oil find. Mr Asaga noted that as a major entity in the country, it only made sense that GNPC invested in certain strategic national assets, notably in Cocoa, telecommunication, gold production, banking as well as the Osagyefo Barge and the West African Gas Pipeline Project.

He described the government's decision to go public on the oil find at this time as "premature", saying that it was a complete show of desperation over the continued exposure of its incompetent handling of the energy sector.
"In the process of this PR ploy, the President made A statement, re-echoed by his Minister of Energy, ... which are simply false ...", he added.

Mr. Asaga described the claim by the President that the GNPC was a general purpose company and that it was not focused on its core business of oil exploration as false, indicating that given the limited resources of the corporation there was a tremendous effort to attract foreign investment in undertaking exploration.

He argued that the GNPC enabled companies to have ready access to all data in respect of Ghana's sedimentary basins and made available its interpretations, including maps of prospects in the various areas. Mr. Asaga, a former Director at GNPC's Corporate Department, said GNPC undertook a number of promotional activities, including the annual Oil and Gas Africa International which not only became popular on the oil and gas calendar across Africa, but a strategic source of industry data and expertise.

The GNPC, he noted, successfully attracted companies into Ghana in the 1990's, the most intensive exploration period with investments worth about 200 million dollars.
"The deepwater areas were of particular interest to GNPC and 65 per cent of the area over which petroleum agreements had been signed were in deepwater by the end of the 1990's," Mr Asaga said, noting that Hunt Oil discovered a column of oil in one of the wells but considered that it was not commercial and it was after this that Kosmos Energy came to partner GNPC to yield this discovery.
He said it was wrong for the government to take whole credit for the discovery since these works by earlier companies and data they left behind resulted in this find.
"Indeed, it was the valuable data that GNPC made available to Kosmos Energy as well as GNPC's own assessment of the prospect that enabled Kosmos to succeed."

Mr Asaga said the GNPC personnel in the exploration and production division are the same people that have been in place before 2001. "At no point prior to 2001 did the exploration staff of GNPC get distracted from their main responsibilities," adding that, it was important to understand the rationale of GNPC investments." He said in the international oil industry, it was normal to have oil companies investing in fields ranging from telecommunications, mineral resource development through farming and ranching, citing the case of Shell.

Mr. Asaga said it was important for government to rally the nation together in the light of the worsening energy crisis, instead of polarising the nation as they seek to escape responsibility for their actions and inactions.
He said the NDC was ready to share ideas with the government in good faith in pursuit of the common national goal of solving the energy crisis, which is threatening the entire nation. 21 June 07
Source:GNA

Mass mosquito spraying exercise for Accra


The Libyan government is to embark on a mass spraying in the Greater Accra Region to help in the malaria control programme.Libya would also offer free vaccination covering about two million animals in the region to help prevent the out-break of animal diseases. This was disclosed when two representatives from the Libyan Embassy, Dr Abdulai Abubakar and Dr Bashir Gshera paid a courtesy call on the Greater Accra Regional Minister, Sheikh I.C.Quaye, on Thursday. Dr. Bashir Gshera, General Director of Agricultural Pest Control Centre, said the exercise was part of the Libyan government's efforts to assist some African countries prevent malaria.He said similar programmes had been carried out in four African countries- Burkina Faso, Mali, Chad, Senegal.
The two exercises were estimated to cost about two million dollars and Ghana had the opportunity to decide which type of vaccine to be use in the programme.He said the vaccine and pesticides to be used would be bought in the country at the expense of the Libyan government in addition to the payment of personnel working under the exercise which is expected to target the most mosquito breeding areas in Accra.
Dr Abdulai Abubakar, General Director of Animal Breeding and Veterinary Centre in Libya said it was a mere coincidence that the programme had to meet with the upcoming African Union Summit to be held in Ghana.Mr. Sheikh I. C. Quaye said the Libyan gesture was most welcomed and called on Ghanaians to join in the campaign against filth in the city.The Minister expressed gratitude saying, "this will go a long way to strengthen the ties between Ghana and Libya".
Source:GNA

NDC running mate: Betty Mould to partner Mills


The jostling among potential running mates to the National Democratic Congress’ (NDC’s) presidential candidate for the 2008 polls, Professor John Evans Atta Mills, continues but The Chronicle can reveal that the opposition party is now most likely to settle on a surprise candidate in the person of Mrs. Betty Mould-Iddrisu, wife of Alhaji Mahama Iddrisu.
Deep throat party sources disclosed to the paper that she currently stands tallest among all other aspirants for the party’s number two slot though the lobbying for Hon. John Dramani Mahama, Member of Parliament (MP) for Bole-Bamboi cannot be downplayed and he may still be the only person to, in the most unlikely situation, thwart the almost certain selection of Mrs. Mould-Iddrisu as Mills’ running mate.
Top members of the party at its Kokomlemle headquarters and other non-executive but influential figures are now split into two as far as the choice between the two is concerned, with each group lobbying strongly but with the pro- Mould-Iddrisu group seen as the one likely to carry the day. The new development throws out names of key contenders like Nana Konadu Agyemang Rawlings, wife of party founder and former President, Jerry Rawlings; Mrs. Christine Amoako Nuamah, former Minister in the NDC regime; Hon. Alban Kingsford Sumana Bagbin, Minority Leader in Parliament and Alhaji Mohammed Mumuni, an influential Northern lawyer and running mate for Mills in the 2004 elections, who held the Kumbugu Parliamentary seat till the dissolution of the third parliament of the Fourth Republic.
The 54-year-old Betty Mould-Iddrisu holds a master of Law degree from the London School of Economics, a Bachelor of Law from the Ghana School of Law and an LLB from the University of Ghana.
She currently works with the Legal and Constitutional affairs Division of the Commonwealth Secretariat as the Chief Legal Advisor and in-house Counsel to the Commonwealth Secretary-General and the Secretariat.
She worked with Ghana’s Ministry of Justice from 1978 until her appointment at the Commonwealth Secretariat in November 2003. At the Justice Ministry, she headed the Industrial Property Law Division and was later appointed Ghana’s Copyright Administrator before leaving for the Commonwealth job, after serving as Head of the Ministry’s International Law Division.
A co-founder of the African Women Lawyers Association (AWLA) in 1999, Mrs. Mould-Iddrisu chaired the group till 2003, during which period she chaired also, both the Ghanaian and African Regional groupings of the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA).
Party sources revealed to the paper that Mrs. Mould-Iddrisu’s surprise inroad into the running mate race stems from the fact that many party strategists found her to be the most suitable candidate going by the guidelines spelt out by the party for the selection of its running mate.
She satisfies the gender balance factor, which is highly rated by the party and has what sources described as cross-cultural appeal by marriage and other genealogical traces. On her own, she stands out as the most regionally balanced among all the other contenders.
By marriage, she is strongly bonded to the northern sector of the country as her husband, Alhaji Iddrisu, who currently heads Professor Mills campaign team, is from the Upper West Region and has influence in other parts of Northern Ghana.
Mrs. Mould-Iddrisu is linked to the Ashanti region maternally. Her late mother, Felicia Mould, hailed from Ejuratia near Mamponteng in the Kwabre District of Ashanti Region.
Her father, the late William Jacob Kwesi Mould, is a thoroughbred Ga from the heartland of Accra - Jamestown, and most NDC strategists say with this multi-ethnic composition, Mrs. Mould-Iddrisu would be the best candidate to partner Prof. Mills.
John Mahama, 47, still has extreme affability and decorum as his key strengths and his possible appeal to women voters because of his good looks remain indubitable.
Interestingly, John, son of prominent Northern Convention People’s Party (CPP) politician and former Regional Minister in the Dr. Nkrumah regime, Mr. E. A. Mahama, is also linked to the Brong Ahafo Region by marriage. His wife, Laudina Mahama, a businesswoman, hails from Yefri-Bodom in the Nkoranza District and those lobbying for the affable legislator add this factor of his linkage to the Brong Ahafo Region, where the NDC is relatively strong, to his strong points.
General Secretary of the NDC, Mr. Johnson Asiedu Nketiah, had previously told the paper in an interview that the guidelines for the selection of running mate did not make room for ethnic and religious considerations. However, party sources have stated that behind the scenes, the party was working to see how to break the NPP’s domination of the Akan areas by getting a running mate with at least some traces of Akan.
This saw names like Mr. Paul Victor Obeng, a man described by Jerry Rawlings in the PNDC days as having unique brainpower that could not be matched by any in the then opposition, being proposed for consideration.
The decision to settle on someone with Akan links is further enforced by the argument that almost all the party’s holders of shadow ministerial positions in parliament are MPs from the North and the Volta Regions, which seems to enforce the position that the NDC is a Northern and Voltaian party.
The General Secretary told the paper in an interview yesterday that as far as he was concerned, the choice of running mate was the prerogative of Prof. Mills and that the Professor had not yet disclosed his choice to the party. He said the NDC, as a Social Democratic party, believes in equality and justice and would, in line with that, not in any way discriminate against any sex in its activities.
Mr. Asiedu Nketiah emphasized that it was for that reason that gender consideration was made one of the major issues in the guidelines for the selection of a running mate for the 2008 elections.
Asked whether the party was likely to come out with its presidential running mate before the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) goes to congress, he responded, “in fact, that is information we are keeping close to our chest. It is something I won’t tell you,” the General Secretary emphasized.
The Chronicle has however learnt that strategically, the party would want to know who leads the NPP before naming its running mate. The NDC is also said to be having fears that the NPP may ultimately settle on a woman as a running mate to exploit the gender factor, which is likely to be hyped by gender activists in next year’s election, hence the consideration for Mrs. Mould-Iddrisu as running mate.
Other female contenders whose names had come up for the position were, Mrs. Ama Benyiwa-Doe, the party’s Women Organizer and Hannah Tetteh, former MP for Ewutu Senya but their names had to be dropped from the list because they both hail from the same region as the flagbearer –Central Region - and could therefore not go as running mate for strategic reasons.
Source:Ghanaian Chronicle

Addo Kufuor quits government?

Dr. Kwame Addo-Kufuor, Minister of Defence and a key presidential aspirant of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) has blazed the trail by formally tendering his resignation to his boss, President John Agyekum Kufuor, in response to a directive that those who seek to succeed him should quit their portfolios.Dr. Kwame Addo-Kufuor, by the decision, has opened a new chapter in the NPP’s march towards the 2008 polls, which is gradually heating up.Communications Minister, Prof Mike Oquaye, is also said to have tendered his resignation to pursue his presidential ambition.
It is expected that more letters will be handed to the Office of the President, before or after today’s Cabinet Meeting.Dr. Addo-Kufuor told DAILY GUIDE in an exclusive interview yesterday at his Burma Camp office that his decision was based on principle.“I believe that a man must live by his words. The decision is the price one must pay for aspiring to serve his country at another level,” he said in a very sober mood.This move is expected to be emulated by others with similar ambitions within the next few days, in consonance with the presidential fiat.Eight ministers are expected to bow out in a dramatic style, after the presidential marching order.
The physician/politician, Dr. Addo-Kufuor, is also the MP for the Manhyia constituency in the Ashanti Region, a position he has held for three consecutive parliamentary terms.He has been described as one of the leading contenders in the race and by the strategic importance of his portfolio and his blood relationship to the President, the attention of many political observers have been turned to him, with reference to the resignation order.His decision therefore will come as a shock to observers who speculated that he would be the last to obey Big Brother’s orders.Addo Kufuor has covered the whole country with his message of service to Ghana and with ample time at his disposal, now that he has resigned, more of his presence is going be felt in the nooks and cranny of the country as he engages the delegates.Following in Dr. Addo-Kufuor’s foot steps is the Communications Minister, Prof Mike Oquaye, the man who once served as the country’s High Commissioner to India.
The Prof is the MP for Dome/Kwabenya constituency in the Greater Accra Region and it has been gathered that last Tuesday’s Meet the Press was his last official function as a minister.President Kufuor has not yet responded to the resignation correspondences, but observers are of the opinion that today being Cabinet meeting day, he would state his position on the resignations and other matters.Last week, media reports said President Kufuor had read the riot act to his ministers who harboured presidential ambitions, asking them to quit his government to concentrate on their campaign.
Source:Daily Guide

Ghana is back on track with investment opportunities - Veep woos foreign investors

Accra, June 6, GNA-Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia says Ghana's economic opportunities for private sector investors are back on track as...